A MANIFESTO FOR THE AGES…

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It really doesn’t seem right that The Indelicates have only ever appeared once on TVV prior to today, and it was courtesy of a wonderfully compiled ICA, courtesy of Rol back in November 2017.

As Rol said in his intro, they are a duo whose records are rarely played on the radio, nor are they given much space in the mainstream or specialist music media.  They emerged at a time (2005) when many folk were beginning to acknowledge that the way music was going to be discovered, listened to and ‘consumed’ was totally different to what had gone before. It maybe didn’t quite turn out quite as envisaged at the time in that streaming was a concept/idea rather than a reality (and the re-birth of vinyl was just a glint in a few eyes), but the bio from the official website offers a biting summary:-

“The Indelicates consumer lifestyle brand is the family business of Simon and Julia Indelicate, a Mom and Pop enterprise based in Lewes, a small town in Western Europe.

“The band first performed at the peak of the landfill indie craze that nobody remembers fondly in 2005 and released their debut album, American Demo, on some record label or other in 2008.

“Luckily, the music industry promptly collapsed completely and they managed to rescue their minor back catalogue from the wreckage. Unwilling to be deterred by mere financial calamity they immediately started work on Songs For Swinging Lovers, their easy second album.

“Since then, the list of things they have invented includes: Crowdfunding, Virtual Reality Music Videos, Living Room concerts, Gamergate, Being against Romantic Nationalism, Bandcamp, Super Special Editions, Footnoted lyric books, The New DIY and a range of puppets. Having done all of these things first, it has fallen to other people to be successful with them. And that’s absolutely fine.”

All of which should indicate that The Indelicates are far from your average run-of-the-mill musical combo.  I’ll hand back to Rol, who is such an exceptionally talented writer, to offer his take on why they never became better known.

Of course, I realise The Indelicates won’t be everyone’s cup of tea. They’re a difficult band to pin down. One minute they’re indie pop, the next they’re cabaret. One minute Jacques Brel, the next Carter USM. At times Kate Bush, occasionally Victoria Wood. They also have a very distinct lyrical voice, and they’re uncompromising in that voice. Just like Jim Bob, Morrissey, or Joe Strummer: they say what they have to say and don’t care one hoot if you don’t like it… they’re certainly not bothered about upsetting the BBC with their lyrics and not getting airplay… but then again, why should they be? Not even 6Music will touch them with a bargepole. (I never understood why Lammo wasn’t all over them. Maybe Peel would have loved them. Whether they’d have loved him back is another question entirely…)

Villain Towers is home to six artefacts courtesy of The Indelicates; the first two albums on CD, three 7″ singles (all from the debut album) and one EP, again on CD. It’s the EP that I’d like to draw to your attention today.

Having initially issued all their music in digital form as free downloads from a website, the duo released a 7″ single, We Hate The Kids, in April 2006 (while also making it, along with the b-side and some remixes, available via the website).

It took until February 2007 before the next physical release, in the shape of The Last Significant Statement To Be Made In Rock & Roll EP, a CD release to tie-in with a tour of Germany.

mp3: The Indelicates – The Last Significant Statement To Be Made In Rock & Roll
mp3: The Indelicates – Sixteen
mp3: The Indelicates – Heroin
mp3: The Indelicates – Unity Mitford (acoustic)
mp3: The Indelicates – Stars (live)
mp3: The Indelicates – The Last Significant Remix

All five of the songs on the EP would later be re-recorded and included on the debut album, American Demo, which was released in April 2009. I recently gave the album a listen again in its entirety…..and it’s an absolute belter, well worth tracking down if you don’t have a copy.

JC

IT REALLY WAS A CRACKING DEBUT SINGLE (71)

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There’s not been any enough jangly pop on this blog in recent times. As an apology for those who have to expect such things round on the little corner of t’internet, here’s a quite magnificent debut 45 that dates back to 1984

mp3: The Woodentops – Plenty

Released on Food Records, it was actually the second single to be released on the then new label that had been founded by David Balfe (ex-The Teardrop Explodes) and which would, a few years later, become the home of Jesus Jones and, later on again, Blur.

Plenty is a wonderfully jaunty single.  It was so good that Geoff Travis immediately made an audacious and successful bid to snatch The Woodentops away to his Rough Trade Empire, which was then riding very high from the hits of The Smiths.

Here’s the other two tracks on the debut 12″, all taken from a copy of the vinyl occupying a spot on the shelves of the large antique storage cupboard in Villain Towers, not too far away from the myriad of singles released by The Wedding Present.

mp3: The Woodentops – Have You Seen The Lights
mp3: The Woodentops – Everybody

The b-sides, and Everybody in particular, give an early indication that they were a cut above most indie bands of the era.

This guest ICA from Strictly Rockers, written back in April 2016, will take the story forward to that point in time.  The Woodentops are still going strong and a UK tour is scheduled for next month.*

*oops on my part.  As Mike from Manic Pop Thrills pointed out, the tour I had looked at on-line at the band’s website actually happened in 2022 and isn’t next month.  Sorry!

JC

PET SHOP BOYS SINGLES (Part Four)

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On the 14th August 1987, the ITV network across the UK broadcast Love Me Tender: A Tribute to the Music of Elvis Presley.  It’s a two-hour show to mark the 10th anniverary of Elvis’s death and it consists of singers and bands from all eras and all genres offering their take on some of the songs he was best known for.

The British Film Institute website provides an exhaustive list of those who were involved in some shape or form.  Pet Shop Boys stand out as just about being the only non-guitar or traditional rock based act taking part.

Such was the reaction to their appearance that the duo decided to do a proper recording and release it as a stand-alone single.

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The single certainly divided opinion.   Elvis Presley, while not the first to record it, had been the first to have a hit with it in 1973.   A decade later, Wille Nelson enjoyed success with the song.  Both versions were derivative in that they were along the lines of what you’d expect a break-up song to sound like.  Pet Shop boys, however, went all HI-NRG and dancey on us.  The sort of sound that appealed to those who hadn’t carried any torch for Rent.  It was all over the radio stations after its release on 30th November 1987.  Just over three weeks later, and it was a most unlikely Christmas #1.

7″

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Always On My Mind
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Do I Have To?

The b-side is a ballad.  It sounded quite different to most previous PSB tracks, but, as now can be seen with many of the b-sides, it was a sort of trial run for the sort of sound they would introduce on albums many years down the line. It’s rather gorgeous, albeit I didn’t fully appreciate it until those later albums got me more familiar with this side of PSB.

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Heart was released on 21st March 1988. It’s a bit of a strange one in that the duo went back to the well of Actually to lift a fourth single from it, a full six months after the album had been released.  To be fair, it wasn’t a straight lift as a new mix that was, in places, noticeably different from the album version.

7″

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Heart
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – I Get Excited (You Get Excited Too)

The normal course of events for a fourth single to be taken from an album is to slide in around the #20 mark and then quickly disappear from you.  Not in this instance as Heart spent three weeks at the top of the chart.

The duo, despite continuing to air the song in the live settings in acknowledgement of its success, have both said it feels a bit lightweight and straightforward compared to many earlier and indeed later singles. It’s also the case that the b-side, while being enjoyable enough, didn’t really bring anything new to the table, being another HI-NRG dance number.

The fact that Heart proven to be their final #1 single probably adds to their feeling of annoyance and a view that chart positions aren’t everything.  It was also the case, although we didn’t know it at the time, that Neil and Chris were in early 1988 working on material that was radically different to what they were most associated with.  But that’s for next week.

Worth mentioning at this juncture that, despite yielding two #1 singles and two other top ten hits, as well as a non-album single also being a #1 hit, Actually never got any higher than #2 in the album charts, all of which led some snobbish critics to dismiss them as lightweight and inconsequential. How wrong could they be???

JC

 

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #342: THE THANES

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Only one track on the hard drive from this lot, courtesy of the Big Gold Dreams box set.  Here’s the blurb from the accompanying booklet.

After two singles with The Green Telescope, Lenny Helsing and friends formed The Thane of Cawdor, then merely The Thanes, who embarked on a lengthy run of ’60s-styled bubblegum garage that lasted far longer than the decade that inspired them.

This debut single, from September 1987, was released in 7″ and 12″ formats, and was produced by Jamie Watson, former vocalist with Persian Rugs, whose Chamber Studio and Human Condition label did so much to foster Edinburgh’s indie underground.

Helsing and Co. released the Thanes of Cawdor and Better Look behind you albums and several singles, with a Rev-Ola compilation, Evolver, taking stock of Thanes material up to 2001.  A reformed line-up joined real-life Scots 1960s beat combo, The Poets, and continue to play a thriving European pysch-garage circuit

mp3: The Thanes – Hey Girl (Look What You’ve Done)

JC

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN SINGLES : #006

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Sexy Loser

006 – BILLY BRAGG – ‚The World Turned Upside Down’ (Go! Discs, ’85)

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Hello friends,

before I started writing this, I was wondering whether there are many bands or artists which I have seen live more often than I saw Billy Bragg. The answer is: a handful, if at all. The Ramones come to mind, so do The Jesus & Mary Chain and New Order.

But today it is Billy Bragg and there are many reasons why I enjoyed his performances so much back in the mid/late eighties and early 90’s. I think that he, a bit like The Clash, more or less managed to express exactly my views. Views of politics and also views of unreturned love. His records included lyric sheets, which, with English not being my first language, should be made a compulsive thing to do for every artist worldwide! I hung on every word he sang and felt entirely what he felt. Even today I know every single word as well from ‘Life’s A Riot With Spy vs Spy’ as from ‘Brewing Up With Billy Bragg’, his first two albums from ’83 and ’84.

So when I first had the chance to see him live, I went of course. This was before he was accompanied by The Blokes or any other backing combo, I should add – just Billy and his guitar in a small Cologne club. And he blew me away, there is no other way of describing it! God knows, Billy Bragg is not the most talented singer on earth, but sure enough he is one of the funniest persons you have ever witnessed:

In between his numbers, he always had some anecdote to tell to the audience, some political stuff, but mostly little funny things which made you laugh out loud. If memory serves correctly, there weren’t two songs which he would have segued into another – there was always his little speech: I thought it was awesome!

Years later I saw him performing a big open air festival in Belgium along with The Cramps, The Buzzcocks, Nick Cave and others. It was held on an abandoned aero field. Just rectangular concrete with no shade whatsoever, and it was a thousand degrees there in the sun. Billy entered the stage in the late afternoon and played his heart out. And still, after five or six years, he had this habit of telling his little stories, which I hadn’t expected, but I thought was great … perhaps even better than some of the songs he wrote at that time. One poor guy, most probably no longer entirely sober, was spotted by Billy from stage when pissing against a fence at the very back of the audience. So Billy yelled at him at the top of his lungs and made everyone in the audience turn around to watch this poor fellow putting his dick back to where it belongs in sheer desperation …. priceless!

By and large I lost interest though after ‘William Bloke’ … the album had its moments, but I wasn’t totally convinced. But Billy Bragg meant so much to me, it would not have been possible not to have one of his singles included in the box with the 111 best singles in the world. I chose the ‘Between The Wars’ – EP, his second single, which comes with four tunes, in fact: the title track, ‘Between The Wars’, ‘Which Side Are You On’, (a version of) ‘It Says Here’ and the one I went for, which is a cover of a Leon Rosselson song. If you didn’t know that though, you wouldn’t detect he is covering the tune – I always thought he sings it as if it was his own composition.

 

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mp3: Billy Bragg – World Turned Upside Down

Which song would you have chosen?!

As usual, enjoy!

Dirk

 

 

 

 

 

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #330: GIORGIO MORODER (1983)

A guest posting by Leon MacDuff

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Romance ’83: A Giorgio Moroder ICA

1983 was a good year for Giorgio Moroder. It certainly wasn’t his first annus mirabilis – after all you can’t dismiss 1979, when he resurrected the careers of Sparks and the Three Degrees (don’t be put off by the sappy ballad “Woman In Love”, there’s disco gold in them there elpees), pausing just long enough to pick up the first of his three Academy Awards. Or 1977, the year he changed the course of popular music forever, armed only with a single kick drum and a borrowed Moog (and, to be fair, a Donna Summer, which always helps). Nevertheless, 1983 was a good’un.

Now well established in L.A., he was in demand as a soundtrack composer as well as a record producer. And while especially during his Hollywood years (of which 1983 is slap bang in the middle) he may not have been averse to the odd bit of musical cheese, on the whole he was doing good work which doesn’t get the attention that his disco era productions do. Sure, there may be nothing as groundbreaking here as “Chase” or “I Feel Love” but nevertheless 1983 saw Moroder very much in his pomp. Trevor Horn has been described as the man who invented the 80s, but Giorgio Moroder is surely a strong contender too, so here’s forty minutes of the great man at work.

Side One

(1)  Nina Hagen – Zarah

I feel like I should be more familiar with Nina Hagen. From what I’ve heard of her usual material, she’s a highly idiosyncratic performer with a remarkable voice, and she has had a pretty colourful life which you can read about elsewhere. But actually I mostly know her for her Moroder-produced album “Fearless” (and its German-language version “Angstlos” which also has a couple of different songs). You don’t have to tell me it’s not representative of her career as a whole, I do know! I really like the album though, not least because Moroder throws everything at it.

The single Zarah is a part-translated version ofIch weiß, es wird einmal ein Wunder gescheh’n”, a signature song of Swedish actress Zarah Leander who introduced it in the 1942 film “Die große Liebe” (according to Wikipedia, “the most commercially successful film in the history of the Third Reich”, which is quite the double-edged sword). Leander herself had rather an interesting life too, with her career in Germany leading to (probably incorrect) accusations of collaboration with the Nazis… but again, there are other places you can read about that. I’m really supplying the rabbit holes today, aren’t I? Anyhow, it’s a strong opening, and to answer your inevitable question: one minute and 28 seconds, that’s how long it goes on like that for. It’s worth sticking with…

(2) Irene Cara: Flashdance… What A Feeling!

I could hardly ignore this, Moroder’s biggest hit of the year, and one of his biggest ever. The Flashdance soundtrack was mostly split between Moroder and Phil Ramone, but it was Moroder who got the title track. The lyrics were written by Irene Cara and regular Moroder collaborator Keith Forsey in the taxi on the way to the studio, and the song won the three of them an Oscar – Moroder’s second following a Best Original Score prize for the Midnight Express soundtrack six years earlier.

In the film, the song is used in an audition scene, the triumphant feel-good nature of which is slightly undercut by the obvious-once-you-spot-them switches between multiple body doubles… and something not entirely dissimilar happens with the song’s standard commercial release, which suffers several clumsy edits (to pick just two, listen out for the clunky cut-and-shut at 0.54 and Cara’s held note being suddenly cut off at 3.14) and for good measure is also saddled with a guitar solo that isn’t even trying. Still, you’d have to admit it’s pretty iconic for anyone who grew up in the 1980s, which is probably most of us, yes?

(3) Debbie Harry: Rush Rush

Movie soundtracks are to a large extent hostages to the fortunes of their parent films. You can pour heart and soul into a great soundtrack but if nobody likes the movie, your work’s just not going to get noticed. In all honesty I’m not sure Moroder’s song score for Scarface is really that much better than his work on D.C. Cab or Superman III, but it hit the jackpot in terms of being attached to a movie that garnered both critical plaudits and popular success. And it IS a good collection with a decent spread of pop styles, albeit somewhat lacking in star power – aside from Debbie Harry of course. You’ll remember that Giorgio and Debbie already had some history, Blondie’s Moroder-produced “Call Me (Theme From American Gigolo)” being a massive hit back in 1980. I’ll be honest, “Rush Rush” isn’t in the same league, but it does seem a shame that they didn’t work together more. Rush Rush itself also got a bit overlooked; I’d got the impression that Harry was in a bit of a career slump at the time but checking it out, I see her solo album Koo Koo had actually done pretty decent business so it’s surprising this didn’t get a bit more attention.

(4) France Joli: Blue Eyed Technology (dance mix)

If you watch those TV shows where they try to prove an old painting is by a recognised artist (and therefore worth squillions) then you’ll know where I’m coming from when I suggest this one may really be more “studio of Moroder” than “by Moroder”. France Joli’s album “Attitude” has Giorgio credited as executive producer, but reading between the lines, it would appear that regular collaborators Pete Bellotte and Richie Zito were the ones actually putting in the studio hours (and Moroder has no writing credits either – this one’s by Bellotte/Zito but the album draws on a large pool of contributors, including former Jo Jo Gunne frontman Jay Ferguson and hi-NRG star Hazell Dean). But Moroder and Bellotte are credited for this 12” remix so I’ll give him the benefit of the doubt, I guess.

Quebecois singer France Joli scored a disco classic right out of the gate with 1979’s “Come To Me” but never quite managed to repeat the trick. “Attitude” is a good try, though – both this and the album’s other single “Girl In The 80s” sound like they have real hit potential (and they really do showcase the classic Moroder sound, even if they were put together by his understudies), but ultimately failed to make much of a splash.

(5) Irene Cara: Romance ‘83

The success of “Flashdance… What a Feelingled to Moroder being commissioned to do a full album – What A Feelin’ – for Irene Cara, and shocker: it’s rather good! Cara, who’d self-composed most of her previous album, was keen to emphasise that it was really more of a Moroder project, though her lyrics – which occasionally slip into the blandly motivational but are more usually engaging and even witty – hint at the potential of an ongoing creative partnership which sadly never came to be. Cara might not have appreciated the comparison, but to my mind What a Feelin’ gives an idea of what a Donna Summer album might have sounded like in 1983 had Geffen allowed her partnership with Moroder and Bellotte to continue. It’s certainly a stronger collection of songs than Summer’s own album that year, “She Works Hard For The Money” which has the title track and maybe a couple of other decent numbers but falls back on a lot of filler.

As for this track… a good old Giorgio Moroder synthpop special which despite the of-its-time sound (and title) is really rather prescient, what with the isolating effects of technology being an even bigger issue now then they were forty years ago. And of course it gives its name to this ICA, because it was just too good a title to pass up!

Side Two

(1) Paul Engemann: Scarface (Push it to The Limit)

The Scarface soundtrack offered a moment in the spotlight to several of Moroder’s regular backing singers including Beth Andersen (who you’ll have heard duetting with Limahl on The NeverEnding Story – though you’re unlikely to have seen her doing it as Limahl’s associate Mandy Newton lip-synced the part for the video and promotional appearances) and E.G. (Elizabeth) Daily, who went on to do her best “girls from The Human League” impression on Together In Electric Dreams before becoming a successful voice actor. Also getting his turn up front was Paul Engemann, who briefly became a bankable star off the back of this track, and got himself featured on several subsequent Moroder soundtracks – as well as on “Reach Out”, a cheesily “motivational” commission for the 1984 Los Angeles Olympic Games. Truthfully, I think this one’s a bit cheesy as well, but apparently quite popular at the time, especially stateside.

(2) Chaka Khan: No See No Cry

I think it’s fair to say that Superman III does not have a good reputation. It did well at the box office (by this stage the Superman name pretty much guaranteed a good return), but was savaged for its incoherent plot and excessive emphasis on comedy. Giorgio Moroder had a different reason to feel disappointed, as he’d been commissioned to write a suite of original songs only for them to be barely used in the actual film. We did at least get to hear them via the soundtrack LP, which featured Moroder’s songs on one side and selections from Ken Thorne’s orchestral score on the other. I’m not entirely sure that No See No Cry actually appeared in the film at all but Chaka gives it her usual class, even if the song sounds more suited to Shalamar… who we’ll hear in about 11 minutes’ time.

(3)    Nina Hagen: Flying Saucers

One thing I do know about Nina Hagen is that UFOs are one of her recurring obsessions (supposedly she saw one while pregnant and it blew her mind, or something). Hence this endearingly daft bit of breezy synthpop from the Fearless album. That’s all I’ve got on this. Just listen and enjoy…

(4) Giorgio Moroder and Joe Esposito: A Love Affair (12″ remix)

In the midst of all the soundtrack commissions and reinventions for other artists, arguably the least interesting album Moroder was involved with in 1983 was his own. Solitary Men, on which he formed an ad hoc duo with former Brooklyn Dreams frontman Joe Esposito, is itself a reinvention, of sorts, but sadly it’s the reinvention of a pioneering dance producer as a purveyor of rather undistinguished synth-based soft rock. The album’s main selling point was the inclusion of the duo’s AOR ballad from Flashdance, Lady Lady Lady, and if you enjoyed that one then there was plenty more like it, including a cover of Nights In White Satin with, alas, none of the iconoclastic disco sheen Moroder had previously brought to his 1976 version. The best track, and really the only one that approaches the energy he was putting into his work for others, is this one. And I suppose Moroder knew it, since it was also the album’s single and was (in Germany and Italy anyway) favoured with this slightly more exciting 12” mix. All in all though, if you want to explore Moroder’s catalogue then I strongly suggest that Solitary Men is not the place to start.

(5) Shalamar: Deadline USA

Toward the end of ‘83, Moroder had no fewer than four new albums issued in the space of a month, as Fearless, What A Feeling and Scarface were joined by the rush release of the soundtrack to minor comedy D.C. Cab. The unexpected addition of the album to the Christmas release list was due to the film itself being brought forward: new drama The A Team had been the smash hit of US TV’s Fall season and as its breakout star Mr T also had a prominent role in D.C. Cab, distributors were understandably keen to strike while the iron was hot.

Unfortunately the film itself was nothing special, and it just ended up getting lost in the Christmas rush – as did the soundtrack album, which is a shame because it’s really not bad at all. As with Flashdance, a couple of tracks were farmed out to Phil Ramone, but the majority is Moroder’s work and showed he could work in what might nowadays be termed an “urban” style. It also offers up more name recognition than either Flashdance or Scarface had: DeBarge, Peabo Bryson, Stephanie Mills and even veteran rock’n’roller Gary “U.S.” Bonds were all involved, along with Irene Cara, whose opening song The Dream is weirdly addictive despite being a pretty blatant (and even more platitudinous) retread of the Flashdance… What A Feeling formula.

I’m not entirely sure of this, but I think Deadline U.S.A. is pretty much a solo track by Howard Hewett, the only original member of Shalamar left following the recent departure of Jody Watley and Jeffrey Daniel. The depleted Shalamar were probably still the biggest name act on the soundtrack, and got its biggest chorus, but it didn’t do much to halt the band’s commercial decline.

Moroder, on the other hand, emerged from 1983 with his reputation further enhanced. Sadly, other than his existing regulars, he never really worked with the headline stars of his 1983 output again, apart from a remix credit for Blondie’s single “Bad Girl” twenty years later. Nevertheless there were plenty of triumphs yet to come: ‘84 alone gave us Together In Electric Dreams, The NeverEnding Story, a commission for the Olympics, a divisive restoration of silent movie classic Metropolis complete with all-star soundtrack, and, bizarrely, a duet between Janet Jackson and Cliff Richard. Alright, maybe that last one wasn’t quite so much of a triumph. But all that is for another time, maybe…

Leon

STILL GOING STRONG (to my surprise)

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The above is the sleeve to a minor hit single in late 2009. A single that I quite enjoyed. It was catchy but somewhat disposable in that I wasn’t fussed about chasing anything else up.

mp3: The Big Pink – Dominos

I’m posting this as I was really surprised to see that The Big Pink are playing a gig in Glasgow in the middle of February. It’s part of a UK tour taking in London, Manchester, Glasgow and Leeds.  I had assumed it was a comeback tour, as I’d not heard anything of or by them since the hit single (#27). In some ways it is, but given they never really seemed to break-up, it’s maybe more accurate to say there has been a lengthy hiatus.

The Big Pink formed as a duo, consisting of Robbie Furze and Milo Cordell, in 2007.  After just one single on a small indie label in 2008, they were signed to 4AD Records.  The NME was soon championing them, declaring them as best new act at an award ceremony in early 2009, even before they had released anything on 4AD. Around the same time of the award, they recorded this track as a contribution to a NME giveaway called Pictures of You: A Tribute to Godlike Geniuses The Cure:-

mp3: The Big Pink – Love Song

Fair play for such a different and uncommercial take on what has long been regarded as one of the great indie, guitar-based singles of all time.

There were two flop singles before Dominos was a hit in October 2009.  It had next to no impact on the album sales as the debut, A Brief History of Love, had come in one week at #56 and then promptly disappeared from view.

4AD continued with their backing and a second album, Future This, was released in January 2012.  Two pre-album singles had sold poorly, so it was no surprise the parent album failed to make it into the Top 75.

A year later, it was revealed that Milo Cordell had departed from the band.  It seems that Robbie Furze was determined to continue and that production got underway, with a range of guest musicians, for a proposed third album.

Nothing emerged until 2016, and that proved to be a one-off EP for a small label.

Fast-forward to 2022 and The Big Pink are active again, this time as a trio with Akiko Matsuura and Charlie Barker joining Furze, all described as multi-instrumentalists.  A new album, The Love That’s Ours, was released last September, and is the record the trio will be touring later this month. Three singles have accompanied its release.  This is the latest:-

I think it’s fair to say they are a totally different sounding band these days…..however, I’m not all that enamoured by the new sound.  Maybe it’s just me.

JC

THE INSANE COST OF SECOND HAND VINYL? (Issue #3)

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A few weeks back, I posed a question about whether The Smiths should make a reappearance on TVV after more than five years.  I was trying to read the room, as I felt I couldn’t really look at the musical happenings of 1983 without bringing the band into consideration.

A lively debate/discussion ensued via the comments section, with diverse opinions on offer. Many of those who contributed have been long time supporters of the blog, either through regular comments or guest postings, and it soon became apparent that whatever I decided upon, I was going to disappoint a few close friends.

Overall, it felt that most who engaged with the post did think it was possible to detach the art from the artist, with a number of folk making the point that The Smiths were much more than just one member. This, from my dear friend flimflanfan, really hit home:-

“The Smiths were a big part of 1983. I think you should consider their inclusion. That would be an accurate account of then – not now. The achievements of The Smiths other band members deserve to be spoken about without the shadow of the singer’s appalling beliefs. I still can’t listen to The Smiths, but hope in time that I might be able to. The singer’s songs? No. They won’t be listened to again.”

So, when the time comes, the 1983 series will feature The Smiths.

When I came up with the idea of the series looking at the changing cost of vinyl, I wondered whether the change of attitude from many towards The Smiths had resulted in any downward spiral in the prices being asked.

Given that I bought just about everything back in the 80s, I’ve never had to dip into the Discogs market other than for one 12″ single, which I failed to get at the time of release, but much later picked up a second hand copy (in near mint condition for the vinyl and the sleeve) for £6.99, plus P&P, in March 2008:-

mp3: The Smiths – Last Night I Dreamt That Somebody Loved Me

The asking price for the version I have, and rated as near mint/near mint, is in the vicinity of £50.  Copies with sleeve wear and a vinyl assessment of Very Good+, are about half that price.

The increase in cost, in fifteen years, is over 600%, all of which can be attributed to the vinyl revival that was only just beginning to take shape back in 2008.

It’s frightening.

The two b-sides were taken from a session recorded for the John Peel Show in August 1984.

mp3 : The Smiths – Nowhere Fast (Peel Session)
mp3 : The Smiths – Rusholme Ruffians (Peel Session)

It was genuinely strange to listen to these three songs again after so long.  But it’ll still be the very occasional dip into the band’s back catalogue, rather than their singles or albums being on heavy rotation here in Villain Towers.

Oh, and the comeback just happens to be at the same time as I happen to be in Manchester for a few days…..

JC

THE INSANE COST OF SECOND HAND VINYL? (Issue #2)

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I want to say a huge thanks to everyone who pitched in with their thoughts, views, opinions and anecdotes last week when Issue #1 of this series was posted.

The extent of the replies, via the comments section, was unparalleled in the sixteen-plus years during which this and the old blog have been going.  It’s clearly a subject on which folk have a lot to say, so if anyone out there wants to offer up a guest posting, then please feel to do so via the e-mail address : thevinylvillain@hotmail.co.uk

If you do write and don’t receive an immediate reply, then there’s no cause for concern, as I don’t check the inbox every single day.

I had always planned Issue #2 for today, with a specific piece of vinyl obtained a number of years ago via Discogs, but it’s now going to appear tomorrow.  Instead, and inspired by some of the things said in the comments section, I’ve gone into my eBay history as it predates when I started using Discogs.

The unfortunate thing is that there is no precise dating available – it simply says ‘more than a year ago’ for purchases prior to 2022.  I do know, however, that I would have been using eBay to get vinyl and CDs from around mid-2006.  The prices of some of these early purchases seem like a real bargain, which chimes with a number of the experiences a number of you offered up in response to Issue #1.

An early eBay purchase was this:-

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For one reason or another, back in the early 80s, I had never got round to picking up a copy of Send Me A Lullaby, the debut album by The Go-Betweens.  I had all of the other 80s albums, but not the debut, which came out originally in November 1981 on Missing Link Records in Australia and was then issued in the UK by Rough Trade in February 1982.

The Australian release contained eight songs, but the UK release, with the catalogue number ROUGH 45, had twelve songs.  Grant McLellan and Robert Forster themselves later described it as ‘an inauspicious debut’ while Lindy Morrison felt her drumming on the record was lacking.  It was hardly any sort of ringing endorsement for the album, which is why I never had any great urge to buy it.

I spotted it on eBay, most likely in the summer of 2006 when the idea of starting The Vinyl Villain was fermenting.  I wish I could be more precise with the date, but at least the purchase history indicates what I paid for it.

£4.20.  Plus P&P.

I reckoned that was a decent enough price back then.  It felt about right for a second-hand piece of vinyl that was almost 25 years old, and was a record that nobody had any real love for. The pleasing thing was that I now had all the 80s releases on vinyl and the bonus was that, when it arrived, it was immediately noticeable that it had been very well looked after by the previous owner (or perhaps it had hardly been played as it’s not the most consistent listen, certainly in comparison to later albums).

There’s one copy of ROUGH 45 on vinyl currently on eBay.  The asking price is £79.99 with an additional £3.95 P&P.

Over on Discogs, there are thirteen copies up for sale, from people in Germany, Belgium, South Africa, United Kingdom, United States, Greece, Luxembourg, Portugal, Ireland and Japan.

The cheapest is 39 euro, (plus unspecified shipping) with the caveat that there is a scratch on one side of the vinyl, wear and tear to the cover and the original inner sleeve is missing.

The most expensive is $148.15 (US) plus £24.23 (US) shipping.

The one on sale in the UK, which would be the nearest equivalent to the eBay purchase all those years ago, has an asking price of £50 plus £4.95 shipping with the vinyl and sleeve described as VG+, but with a rider of ‘occasional very light background noise.’

A reminder that my purchase, for a copy that is at least VG+ and bordering on near mint, cost £4.20 in 2006.  As I said earlier, the current asking price on eBay is £79.99 which equates to a staggering 1,804% rise from 2006, and while I’m no economist or financial expert, I reckon that’s probably a fair bit above the inflationary level in most countries.

I’ll be surprised if anything I’ve bought on the second hand market via Discogs or eBay has had such an outrageous increase, but I’ll keep an eye out.  In the meantime, here’s a song from said album:-

mp3: The Go-Betweens – Careless

JC

PS : If you want an escape from the soapbox stuff from today, I’ve contributed a couple of contrasting guest pieces elsewhere in recent days.

This one over at Charity Chic Music is a short effort, drawing attention to three songs with the word ‘Revolution’ in the song title. It’s part of his new regular Friday series.

SWC over at No Badger Required has generously given me free rein to talk about Rochdale AFC is his current Sunday series about Third Division football.  I have prattled on at great length, way more than would normally be tolerated on his blog, and I owe him for that.  There’s also a handful of decent tunes referenced……click here if you fancy a read.

PET SHOP BOYS SINGLES (Part Three)

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And now we reach the first imperious phase of the Pet Shop Boys between June and October 1987. Three singles were lifted from their second album Actually, itself released in September 1987.

One of the singles went to #1, while the others reached #2 and #8.  Oh, and while they were at it, they attracted the attention of a brand-new audience for one of the greatest female singers to ever have emerged from the UK, but whose chart hits had long dried up. 

As it turned out, a fourth single would be released from Actually, but that tale is more suited to next week’s instalment.

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It’s A Sin was released on 15th June 1987

From the PSB website:-

It’s A Sin, a song that originally appeared on the demo Neil had in his pocket when he took Bobby O’ out to lunch, was released. “It’s about being brought up as a Catholic. When I went to school you were taught that everything was a sin”.

It reached #1 and caused several notable rumpuses. Jonathan King accused them of plagiarism (he later apologized and paid damages to a charity at their request). A teacher at Neil’s old school, St. Cuthbert’s Grammar School, Newcastle, got very steamed up about the picture Neil painted of his education and castigated Neil in the press.

The Salvation Army magazine, War Cry, put the Pet Shop Boys on the front page and noted, approvingly, “It’s interesting that someone’s raised the concept of sin in our modern life again”. Neil was also asked to appear with Cardinal Hume in a press advert for CAFOD; he politely declined the offer, explaining that he wasn’t a practising Catholic.

The song’s video, a sombre tale of guilt and punishment featuring the seven deadly sins, was the first time the Pet Shop Boys worked with Derek Jarman.

It entered the charts at #5 and then went to #1 where it spent three weeks.  It was also #1 in Austria, Denmark, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden and Switzerland.

7″

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – It’s A Sin
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – You Know Where You Went Wrong

A really long track for a b-side, coming in at not far short of six minutes.  It’s a hypnotically, catchy number with a touch of Latino to the tune.  It was an early indication of the road that the duo would travel on their next again album. It’s long been a favourite of mine.

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What Have I Done To Deserve This was released on 10th August 1987. It was a duet with Dusty Springfield, a much loved and appreciated UK singer but whose last hit single had been back in 1970. PSB had the song ready in time for the release of their debut album some eighteen months earlier, but an initial approach to Dusty’s management hadn’t worked out.  The success of West End Girls changed everything, and the singer flew from her California home to London to record her vocal.  It reached #2 and brought her to a new audience. In 1990, her new album Reputation went Top 20, giving her solo success again after two decades.

7″

mp3: Pet Shop Boys with Dusty Springfield – What Have I Done To Deserve This
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – A New Life

For once, the b-side was a tad anti-climatic, but then again, this release was all about the majesty of the a-side, a song that one critic, writing retrospectively in 2017 said it was “possibly the greatest pop song in history”.

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Rent was released on 12th August 1987. It was the third single to be lifted from the album Please, and perhaps this affected the sales of the 45 as it ‘only’ made #8.  It was, however, a slightly different mix from the album version and the 7″ version was some 90 seconds shorter.

7″

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Rent
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – I Want A Dog

Back in 1987, Rent was really under-appreciated.  There was a sense that PSB were at their best with the bombastic, dancey type numbers, certainly when it comes to 45s.  A mid-tempo, bittersweet love song about a one-sided relationship caused a bit of head-scratching.  There was also a reluctance among some daytime radio DJs and producers to feature a song which was seemingly about male prostitutes  – as it turned out, in one of the few instances where Neil Tennant chose to give an explanation to a song; he (many years later) said he had always regarded it as being about a kept woman in America, possibly the secret lover of a high profile politician.

The b-side is another excellent piece of mid-tempo music. The song would become better known a while later when an Italian-style disco beat was added to it for inclusion on the 1988 album Introspective.

JC

 

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #341: TEXAS

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Yup.

Texas.

A band that dominated the charts in the late 90s with the #1 albums White On Blonde and The Hush, as well as a ridiculously high number of hit singles.

I don’t have any Texas songs from that era.  All I have, courtesy of its inclusion on the Park Lane Archives compilation that I’ve referred to a few times over the years, is this:-

mp3: Texas – I Don’t Want A Lover (demo)

What many folk don’t realise, or perhaps forget, is that Texas for a long long while were in danger of being cast as one-hit wonders.  I Don’t Want A Lover was the debut single.  It reached #8 at the beginning of 1989.  There would then be another twelve singles, only one of which made the Top 20 (and even that was a cover song!), before they struck gold with Say What You Want in 1997.

The demo of the debut single is all slide guitar and bombastic backing track. The drums, incidentally, are the work of Stuart Kerr who had previously been part of TVV favourites, Friends Again.

JC

AN IMAGINARY COMPILATION ALBUM : #329: GRANT LEE BUFFALO

A GUEST POSTING by HYBRID SOC. PROF

GLB

Something wrong in my stars
Could you look at my charts
Help me healing these scars
Could you learn to read minds
In the case of mine
Do you read in the dark

Second stanza from “Honey Don’t Think”

I’ve hesitated to put this ICA together. Grant Lee Buffalo only recorded 4 long-players and that meant the choices were going to be pretty constrained. On top of that, I was worried I’d want too many songs to come from Jubilee. And then there’s the issue that sometimes I find Grant Lee Phillips a bit twee, more sensitive than some versions of me can tolerate. But when I chanced on Truly, Truly this week and forced iTunes/Music to play “Superslomotion” and “Come to Momma, She Say” before I had to leave the laptop I figured I’d take a stab at it… good band.

I’m pretty sure Fuzzy, their first record, was released when I was still at KZSC and I remember liking the record as a whole more than the individual songs on it. Not much in the way of WOW! but, as a unity, there was a structured feeling. I’m probably wrong but, retrospectively, ’93 has long felt like the apogee of the arc from The Feelies through REM splitting into Nirvana and Uncle Tupelo before the two tendencies interwove as the dominance of guitars at the heart of indie/alt/whatever started its slide into the second and third tiers of music sales. I’m not making an argument the Grant Lee Buffalo tracked that arc – they arrive late in the trajectory and their four records are musically consistent. But they were one of the last bands I remember arriving on that scene and staying with that sound as the scaffolding splintered. Other earlier bands continued the tradition, some – miraculously – to this day (whether through stubbornness or reformation) but as I’ve constructed it for myself, these guys signal something, their appearance marked a transition point.

The reason they land where they do, why the signal something meaningful is because – at their best – they make me sway, shimmy, shimmer and shift… they leave my arms akimbo, head back, soaking in their handsome comfort. Notes are sustained, the sonic terrain is vast, the poetry lyrical but their pacing easily as important as the words themselves, and songs glide and swell generating a cocoon into which I settle and nestle. Grant Lee hits the sweet spot between talk

The reason they land where they do, why the signal something meaningful is because – at their best – they make me sway, shimmy, shimmer and shift… they leave my arms akimbo, head back, soaking in their handsome comfort. Notes are sustained, the sonic terrain is vast, the poetry lyrical but their pacing easily as important as the words themselves, and songs glide and swell generating a cocoon into which I settle and nestle. Grant Lee hits the sweet spot between talk singing and sing talking, there are anthemic guitars, strummed acoustics, organ glissades and drones, subtle feedback and falsettos, pedestrian/walking bass and steady drumming each and all staying out of the way but reinforcing the foundation for the pretty. And all with periodic little hints of deep soul and microscopic elements of almost funk. I find them excellent music to cook to.

Perhaps you have, but I haven’t followed Grant Lee Phillips closely since the band split around the turn of the century but he keeps pumping out music and actively touring the acoustic and singer-songwriter side of the band. I’ve liked, but not liked so much I went out in pursuit of more, a number of the songs I’ve found on best-of lists or in magazine compilations but I think the band had something holistic that grabbed me that ends up missing in the solo work.

In any event, my expectations about what would be on this were not realized. I’ve long found that the ICA format means that some songs that would be on a “best of” rather than a “representative sample that works as an album” collection just don’t make it. The fact that “Truly Truly” and “Everybody Needs a Little Sanctuary” aren’t here and that there’s more Mighty Joe Moon than Jubilee genuinely surprised me but, I tried moving things all around and this simply worked best. Forgive me.

It’s The Life, from Mighty Joe Moon (1994)
Testimony, from Jubilee (1999)
Wish You Well, from Fuzzy (1993)
Arousing Thunder, from Copperopolis (1996)
Honey Don’t Think, from Mighty Joe Moon (1994)
My, My, My, from Jubilee (1999)
Mighty Joe Moon, from Mighty Joe Moon (1994)
SuperSloMotion, from Jubilee (1999)
The Hook, from Fuzzy (1993)
Rock Of Ages, from Mighty Joe Moon (1994)

HSP

 

ONE HUNDRED AND ELEVEN SINGLES : #005

aka The Vinyl Villain incorporating Sexy Loser

005 – BIG DRAG – ‚I’m A Lonesome Fugitive’ (Unlean Records, ’79)

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Hello friends,

today I have both for you, in fact: a neat song, one I always adored (and will adore) plus this song is being performed by a band I always loved: the mighty Big Drag!

Their output isn’t big really, there are two singles and an album. But each of the three records is a killer, and that’s for sure. Finding something interesting about Big Drag on the internet gives you a hard time, so what I’ll do is I shamelessly copy and paste what their bassist said in an interview some 27 years ago, a time when the band were at their peak by and large. I say ‘peak’, you know what I mean: obviously they never had a platinum album, but 1994/1995 was when the three records came out, so ….

Anyway, here’s what Colin Jones had to say back then:

“They made the little girls dance.” This is what Big Drag bassist Colin Jones suggested be Big Drag’s epitaph, when asked. It fits like a steel condom, too. Ever since they first skulked in from San Antonio a couple of years back, the laconic trio has brought with them hordes of incredibly nubile women, doing up-and-down-and-round-and-round moves that would make Chubby Checker spit green to Big Drag’s garbage-can guitar-pop. “That’s always been my favorite part of Big Drag,” drawls Jones, who started the band in 1991 with singer/guitarist Milton Robichaux and drummer Dillon Phillips, following the demise of Robichaux’s similarly minded Happy Dogs. “Generally, every show we play, the first two or three rows of people in front of the stage are almost all girls. I dunno why, I guess it’s just that danceable beat, that surfy-kinda beat that you can twist to or whatever. (…)”

In my humble opinion, this pretty much sums up all you need to know about Big Drag: the music will do the rest, promised!

Now, the song I went for is, as I said, one I always loved: I’m A Lonesome Fugitive’. Made famous by Merle Haggard back in 1966, but written (for Merle) by Liz and Casey Anderson (don’t tell me this series doesn’t have some educational aspects too!).

I have often wondered why it is that I love this tune so much. I mean, quite obviously I never ran away from the law or similar (which, in rainy Germany, wouldn’t be much romantic in the first place anyway), nor have I ever been much of a desperado. I once tried to be faster on my moped than the blokes from customs when smuggling a carton of cigarettes. Didn’t work out and I had to pay a fortune. Does this make me an outlaw? Probably not. Then again, one doesn’t need an explanation for everything in life, right?

Alright, San Antonio’s finest, friends, with the B-Side of their Gotta Let Me Go – 7” from 1994:

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mp3: Big Drag – I’m A Lonesome Fugitive

Enjoy – and please let me know what you think of it!!

Dirk

 

 

 

 

 

GET SETT GO!

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The thing is……

If you like this month’s hourly mix, then I’ll take credit for being such a great DJ.

If you don’t like it, then you can blame SWC as all the tracks were part of his Top 40 Best of 2022 over at No Badger Required.

mp3: Various – Get Sett Go!

Slowly Seperate – Crows (#18)
Angelica – Wet Leg (#31)
Trouble – The Big Moon (#22)
2-HEH-V – DAMEFRISØR (#1)
Ballerina (Norma) – VEPS (#16)
New York, Paris & London – HighSchool (#10)
Earth Worship – Rubblebucket (#25)
Molly’s Got A Brand New Haircut – Ghostbaby (#37)
Men On The Menu – Flossing (#3)
This New Will – Scattered Ashes (#29)
Second Thought – MEMES (#19)
New England – Kid Kapichi feat.Bob Vylan (#17)
Circumference – Working Men’s Club (#8)
A55  – English Teacher (#13)
The Hard Part – Album Club (#12)
Statuette On The Console – Bodega (#23)
Untethered – PVA (#5)
Qurantine The Sticks – Yard Act

A couple of tracks from the NBR rundown have been left off this mix as they have appeared on previous mixes. Quarantine The Sticks has been included instead of The Overload, which was #6 in the rundown.

The running time is just under 61 minutes.

JC

THE INSANE COST OF SECOND HAND VINYL? (Issue #1)

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A few days back (last Friday to be precise), something came up on a social media feed with the observation that Where’s Me Jumper? was exactly 31 years old.  The post came with an accompanying poster/advert that said ‘debut single and U.K. Tour – 27.1.92″

I’ve previously considered including the song in the Cracking Debut Singles series, but had always been of the belief that the first release from Sultans Of Ping F.C. was the 12″ What About Those Sultans EP! on Fantastic Plastic given that was their only release on that label before their next three singles came out on Divine Records. 

I was intrigued enough to look on Discogs where the information is that What About Those Sultans was a mail order only release, with its A-side made up of three demos dating from April 1990 and the B-side consisting of two cover versions.  It would seem to have been something of an unofficial release, which means that I shouldn’t have baulked at the idea of Where’s Me Jumper? featuring as part of one of my long-running series.

The song, and it’s accompanying b-sides were highlighted preciously on TVV, back in April 2016 as one of the small number of records I owned on 10″ vinyl.  I didn’t buy said record back in 1991, so my copy is second-hand.

I’ve just checked my Discogs history, and it cost me £2 as part of a larger batch of seventeen second-hand records bought at the same time in July 2011 at a cost of £32.25 plus £12 for postage and packaging, which when you add it all up means it was around £2.60 per item.  The cheapest single was £1, while the two most expensive were £3.50.

Given I was on Discogs, I decided to take a look at what the going rate is for Where’s Me Jumper? on vinyl in 2023.

There are two copies of the 7″ version up for sale.  An Italian retailer is asking for 45 euros plus shipping, while a UK retailer wants £60 (which includes shipping) for what is described as Near Mint in terms of the vinyl and the sleeve.

There are four copies of the 12″ version on offer, from sellers located in France, Italy and the UK.  The range is £25 to 58 euro, (all of them are plus postage), with varying descriptions of the quality of the vinyl and sleeve.

There are also four copies of the 10″ listed on Discogs, all from folk in the UK.  The asking prices are, in ascending order, £40, £45, £50 and £59.99, none of which include shipping.

The thing is, while I would be happy enough to be described as a ‘record collector’, I don’t buy (and have never bought) anything with the idea that it might increase in value.

It’s always been about wanting a particular record and being happy enough to pay a price that I think is reasonable and fair.  I’m also someone who, certainly for the time being, doesn’t want to sell anything from the collection, albeit as I get older and with the recognition that I’ve no family to pass the heirlooms on to, that may change at some point, although ideally it would find its way to someone else younger who is prepared to keep and look after it.

I’m genuinely gobsmacked at the asking price for Where’s Me Jumper?  Even the CD version is going for silly money, with the lowest UK price being £9.

All of which has inspired me to begin this new series looking to see if second hand vinyl has really rocketed in recent years, based on what I have paid for things in the past on Discogs.

Here’s the full list of the seventeen purchases from July 2011, complete with what is being asked for today, comparing it with the same condition of vinyl and sleeve as described when I made the purchase, and from a UK seller as that was the location of the 2011 purchases. Where there is more than one option in 2023, I’ve gone with the lowest asking price.

Yello – The Rhythm Devine (7″)   2011 cost £1. 2023 price £4.
Fire Engines – Big Gold Dream (12″) 2011 cost £2.  2023 price £3.99.
Blood Uncles – Let’s Go Crazy (7″)   2011 cost £1.50. 2023 £1.25.
Billy Bragg – She’s Got A New Spell (7″)   2011 cost £1.50.  2023 price £6.50.
Revenge – Slave + Amsterdam (7″) 2011 cost £1.50.  2023 price £4.
The Monochrome Set – The Monochrome Set (7″) 2011 cost £3.50.  2023 price £10.
Primitives – Way Behind Me (7″) 2011 cost £1.50.  2023 price £0.85.
Various – The Fred EP (7″) 2011 cost £3.50.  2023 price £1.90.
Red Guitars – Good Technology (7″) 2011 cost £2.50.  2023 price £2.99.
Martin Stephenson & Daintees – Slow Lovin’ (7″) 2011 cost £1.50.  2023 price £2.49.
Alan Rankine – The World Begins To Look Her Age (7″) 2011 cost £1.50.  2023 price £1.99.
Camper Van Beethoven – Life Is Grand (7″) 2011 cost £2.  2023 price £2.25
Devo – (I Can’t Get Me No) Satisfaction (7″) 2011 cost £2.  2023 price £2.49.
Kiss AMC – A Bit Of…. (7″) 2011 cost £1.  2023 price £0.40
Sultans of Ping F.C – Where’s Me Jumper? (10″) 2011 cost £2.  2023 price £50
Martin Stephenson & Daintees – Crocodile Cryer (12″) 2011 cost £1.50.  2023 price £1.29.
Champion Doug Veitch – Margarita (12″) 2011 cost £2.50. 2023 price £2

That means six items of vinyl are actually available for less than I paid in 2011, although none of them, price wise, are ridiculously cheaper.  Another five haven’t gone up by much in price (less than £1 in each instance).  The other six have at least doubled, and stupidly so in the case of The Sultans Of Ping F.C.

Removing that one item as it skews things so much, then the cost today of obtaining the other sixteen records adds up to £48.39, in comparison to £30.25.  Which equates to an increase of 60%……..and that’s not taking into consideration that posting and packaging would be a lot more expensive, even if by some way of magic they could all be obtained from and sent out by the one seller.

Here’s the 10″ A-side of the valuable piece of vinyl (that has now been given its own ill-fitting plastic sleeve as additional protection):-

mp3 : The Sultans Of Ping F.C. – Where’s Me Jumper?

And your two fun-filled b-sides.

mp3 : The Sultans Of Ping F.C. – I Said I Am I Said
mp3 : The Sultans Of Ping F.C. – Turnip Fish

I think this series might provoke some surprise and outrage…….

JC

THE GIRL WHO RUNS THE BEAT HOTEL

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This is just the third individual appearance on TVV by Biff Bang Pow!

The debut came in August 2015 as the 25th act to be featured in the still-running Saturday’s Scottish Song series.  As I said at the time, some might argue that Biff Bang Pow! were a London band given that was where they were formed, but as they centred around Alan McGhee I decided they merited a place in the series.  It was also the case in August 2015 that the TVV collection contained just one song by the band, courtesy of She Paints being included on the Doing It For The Kids compilation issued by Creation Records.

The most recent appearance was in January 2021, in response to a request from someone I reckon might be the blog’s only reader in Chile.  Ozzy, (or Osvaldo to give him his ‘proper’ name) had e-mailed me asking if I could upload something by Biff Bang Pow! as he’d enjoyed hearing the song Hug Me Honey when he tuned into an online station based in Switzerland. I was happy to do so and revealed that my collection had expanded to five songs in the intervening period since August 2015.

That’s all changed in recent weeks, thanks to my patronage of Last Night From Glasgow, as I received an advance copy of an album about to be reissued after many years of being out of print.

The Girl Who Runs The Beat Hotel was originally released by Creation in March 1987.  It was the band’s second album.  There’s an interesting review/description of it over at the Trouser Press website:-

Poorly produced with thin, shrill sound, The Girl Who Runs the Beat Hotel reveals much stronger, more attractive songwriting. “Someone Stole My Wheels” and “The Happiest Girl in the World” are convincing period pieces colored in with, respectively, prominent organ and female vocals; “Five Minutes in the Life of Greenwood Goulding” uses crazy backwards guitars. Strangely, McGee’s vocals suggest Robert Smith on “Love’s Going Out of Fashion” and Lloyd Cole on “He Don’t Need That Girl.” The melodies and varied arrangements are stylishly appropriate, but the botched mix prevents them from being fully appreciated. The 12-inch of “Love’s Going Out of Fashion” avoids that sonic pothole and includes three atmospheric non-LP tracks.

The LNFG reissue, hopefully, will resolve some of the issues raised in the above review as it has been remastered by the very skilful and talented Paul McGeechan whose name has been mentioned a few times round these parts.  It’s also an expanded version of the album, with four additional tracks that had previously appeared as b-sides from the same period.

I was pleasantly surprised by how enjoyable a listen the album proved to be.  As much as Alan McGhee would hate anyone to say it, there’s an awful lot of the spiky and tuneful pop sounds of the likes of Josef K, Orange Juice and The Bluebells threatening to break out amidst the artful or psychedelia 60s influenced songs that I was anticipating from what little I knew of their material beforehand. The album arrived as part of the subscription I have with LNFG and it wouldn’t, in normal circumstances, have been something I’d likely have made as a speculative purchase.  I had fully expected that, after one listen, it would have found its way onto the shelf almost in an ‘out of sight’ fashion, but a few weeks on it’s still sitting close to the turntable readily available to be given further spins.

I haven’t quite got round to doing any vinyl rips as yet, so here’s a couple of unmastered tracks, that were also released as singles back in the day:-

mp3 : Biff Bang Pow! – Love’s Going Out Of Fashion
mp3 : Biff Bang Pow! – Someone Stole My Wheels

And here’s the one song I previously knew from the album, courtesy of it being included within the box set Make More Noise – Women In Independent UK Music 1977-1987. The vocals on this one are handled by Christine Wanless (who also co-wrote the song) despite her never seemingly ever being acknowledged as being part of the band.

mp3: Biff Bang Pow! – If I Die

The Girl Who Runs The Beat Motel does come highly recommended.  I’m not sure when the official release date is, but you can pre-order from LNFG by clicking here.

JC

PET SHOP BOYS SINGLES (Part Two)

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My huge thanks to those of you who gave such warm welcomes to this new series.   Just to clarify on the Bobby Orlando releases that I mentioned last week but didn’t feature, the 45s will consist only of those had UK releases AND are mentioned on the PSB official website.

Part Two covers October 1985 – September 1986 and the four singles lifted from debut album Please, itself released in March 1986.

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West End Girls was released on 28th October 1985 and went to #1 in the UK in January. It was subsequently #1 in USA, Canada, Finland, Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, New Zealand and Norway.

7″

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – West End Girls
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – A Man Could Get Arrested

Strangely enough, the 12″ contained a shorter version of A Man Could Get Arrested alongside a near 7-minute dance mix of West End Girls.  I’ve long thought this particular b-side is decent enough but has more than a few similarities to Opportunities, which suggests the duo were still trying to find their feet, musically.

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Love Comes Quickly was released on 24th February 1986.  After the success of West End Girls, hopes here high of achieving something similar.  It only reached #19 while New Zealand and Spain were the only countries where it went Top 10. 

7″

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Love Comes Quickly
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – That’s My Impression

This b-side was, as it turned out, ahead of the curve as it offered up a sign of Pet Shop Boys as a club/dance act.  It’s certainly the first time you could link their sound with that of New Order. The song was certainly more than good enough to be included on the debut album, but didn’t make the cut, which I think was a mistake.

A month later, debut album Please entered the chart at #3.  It was the highest new entry that week, and the only two albums above it were Brothers In Arms by Dire Straits (which had been kicking around the top of the album charts for almost a year) and Hits 4, one of those compilation albums that sold in the millions back in the 80s.  

Fun fact 1.  West End Girls was included on Hits 4, which meant the song was on records sitting at #1 and #3 on the album chart.

Fun fact 2.  Please would spend 37 weeks on the album chart.  But it never got higher than its first week position of #3.

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A new version of Opportunities (Let’s Make Lots Of Money) was released on 19th May 1986. It was a slightly edited version of that included on Please.   It reached #11 in the UK.

7″

mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Opportunities (Let’s Make Lots Of Money)
mp3: Pet Shop Boys – Was That What It Was

Another quality b-side, if perhaps a bit PSB by numbers, but far superior to what many others were offering as a-sides.

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On 22nd September 1986, a re-recorded version of Suburbia was released.  It reached #8 in the UK.  I won’t say any more as the single was feature on the blog just two weeks ago.  If you want to read more about the release, as well as listening to/downloading the tracks, just click here.

JC

SATURDAY’S SCOTTISH SONG : #340: TEENCANTEEN

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I’ve written previously in the present tense about TeenCanteen.   Now that they are that no longer together as a group, I’ll reproduce those words today in the past tense.

TeenCanteen, aside from having a tremendous name, made tremendous old-fashioned pop music that made you want to just dance and sing along. The band consisted of Carla Easton (lead vocals/keyboards), Sita Pieracinni (vocals/bass), Amanda Williams (vocals/guitar) and Deborah Smith (vocals/drums). Note right away the emphasis on all four members contributing on vocals as that was central to their sound, not just on record but in the live setting.

My mate Aldo was quick to pick up on the group back in 2013 just as they were beginning t9o make a name for themselves across the Glasgow scene.  It took me until late 2014 to catch them at a small venue on the south side of Glasgow not too far from my home, and I found myself highly impressed.

The group was tipped by many for big things.  A debut single via cassette had been followed by a debut single on vinyl, before the then new label, Last Night From Glasgow, released their debut album, Say It All With A Kiss, in 2016 to immense acclaim. In the meantime, Carla Easton, using the name Ette, had written, recorded and released a solo album, Homemade Lemonade, a record which was given an even bigger critical acclaim than that of her band.

In early 2017, TeenCanteen’s profile was growing, and the band were at the heart of putting together a number of multi-band shows for worthy and charitable causes in the city, while also releasing a 10″ EP, from which this is the lead track.

Out of the blue came the news that the group was taking a break.  It had been a meteoric rise and perhaps it was a good idea to take stock.  Only problem is that six years down the line, TeenCanteen still haven’t got back together, albeit Last Night From Glasgow, in 2021, did provide a vinyl release for a series of demos that had been in the vaults.

In the meantime, Carla J Easton, as she was now known, released two further excellent solo albums in 2018 and 2020, while a couple of years she joined forces with Simon Liddell (ex-Frightened Rabbit) to form Poster Paints whose debut album was released last October.  It would appear, therefore, that TeenCanteen will be no more, although nothing formal has ever been announced.

Here’s the a-side of the 7″ single released in 2014:-

mp3: TeenCanteen – You’re Still Mine

JC

PERFECTION

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The first gig I ever went to was, as a 15-year-old, at the Glasgow Apollo in May 1979 when I saw The Police supported by The Cramps.  Doing the maths, that’s forty-four years of watching live music, which means I’ve had the privilege of being entertained by a countless number of singers and bands.

Nothing, however, prepared me for the night of Wednesday 25 January 2023 when The Delgados ended a short five-day comeback tour with a show at Glasgow Barrowlands.

I came away, quite prepared to believe that, no matter what else happens over the next twelve months, I was unlikely to see a better gig this year.  And then I slept on it. And then I spent all of Thursday thinking about it.

I reckon I’ll be unlikely to ever come out of any gig for the rest of my life having been so utterly blown away by what I had witnessed.

I hadn’t quite been prepared for what all unfolded.  Sure, the reviews of the gigs in Brighton, London, Manchester and Sheffield had been universally positive, and having looked at the various set lists, I knew what songs to expect.  But as I said to my gig-going companions, and occasional TVV contributors, Aldo and Comrade Colin as we walked out to the iconic venue located on the eastern edge of the city centre, my worries were that it would turn into a mass community choir event from an over-excited audience.  After all, it had been 18 years since The Delgados had graced a stage in their home city, and there was bound to be a lot of excitement and anticipation to the extent of delirium among the 2,000-strong capacity audience.

We got there early and to our delight, the first person we saw was Stevie (of Charity Chic Music fame) who came and joined us.  Over the next hour and a bit before the band took to the stage, and without us shifting from the spot we had decided upon, we must have met or spotted about a couple of dozen more folk we knew, all of whom mentioned the names of other friends who were also somewhere in the building.  I reckon, if I had been able to freely wander around the cavernous venue, that I’d have bumped into anyone and everyone who is part of the local music scene as performers, promotors, writers or just regular gig-goers.  We were all in this together, awaiting the return of the best and most important indie band to come out of Scotland.

Ten musicians took to the stage – Alun Woodward, Emma Pollock, Paul Savage and Stewart Henderson were joined by a keyboardist, a flautist and a string quartet.  The roars were tumultuous.  And then something quite beautiful happened…….

mp3: The Delgados – Everything Goes Around The Water

The opening notes of the opening song are played on a flute.  The audience responded by falling into a hush.  Alun started singing and the band started playing.  Emma came in, on cue, on co-vocal and the string quartet joined in.  The audience, certainly in the area where we were located, halfway back and in the centre, looked on in awe and with utter respect.  Nobody was singing out loud, and nobody was talking excitedly to the persons in the immediate vicinity.  The song ended and the audience erupted.  Not a word was said from the stage.  It was straight into this:-

mp3: The Delgados – Accused of Stealing

A song which has slow bits, fast bits, quiet bits and loud bits.  A song which openly invites crowd participation of the wrong kind.

It didn’t happen.  Just a few minutes in, and the satisfying feeling that this was going to be something unique, with a band on top form and an audience prepared fully to stand and appreciate what was unfolding in front of them – there proved, all night, to be respect and hush throughout during the slower or more intense songs with releases of energy when the faster indie-classics were aired.

The interaction from the stage was for the most part kept to a minimum.  Alun restricted himself to a just saying ‘thank you’ at the end of any song he’d taken lead vocal on. Emma said a little bit more on maybe five or six occasions, but there was always a real flow and tempo to the set.  Near the end, there was a little bit of back and forth between Alun and Emma as the other musicians were introduced – ‘the people on stage without whom this would have been shite’ – as well as thanks to the folk on sound and lights whose contributions were equally invaluable.

The lack of chat enabled the band to get through 23 songs in not too far short of two hours,  including an encore that was every bit as joyful, classy and perfect as the entire night had been. There had even been a little nod of appreciation midset to Robert Burns, the national bard of Scotland whose birthday is celebrated on the very day The Delgados were at The Barrowlands.

Everything Goes Around The Water
Accused Of Stealing
The Arcane Model
The Actress
I Fought The Angels
Aye Today
Child Killers
Pull The Wires From The Wall
Come Undone
The Drowning Years
Such A Parcel Of Rogues In The Nation/Under Canvas Under Wraps
American Trilogy
Reasons For Silence (Ed’s Song)
The Night Before We Land
The Past That Suits You Best
Everybody Come Down
All You Need Is Hate
If This Is A Plan
Encore
Monica Webster
Coming In From The Cold
No Danger
Thirteen Gliding Principles

Emma mentioned that it wouldn’t be too long before they would be back, perhaps to a certain bandstand in the city; the refurbished Kelvingrove Bandstand in the west end of Glasgow is the venue for a two-week long festival of outdoors gigs in the summer months when it’s supposed to be dry, although seeing The National there a few years ago was on a night when the rain was of biblical proportions.

It was more reasons for smiles, as those words from Emma meant The Delgados weren’t just getting together for this handful of dates and then going back into hibernation or retirement.  And with that, it was time to make an exit from the wonderful old venue, and as I made my way down the stairs, I couldn’t help but going all High Fidelity on myself and thinking where, in the Top 5 of all time Barrowland gigs this would find itself.  By the morning, I was thinking where in the Top 5 of all gigs in any location.

JC

OUT OF THE BLUE?

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August 1980.   Ultravox finally enjoy a hit single.

mp3: Ultravox – Sleepwalk

It was hardly an overnight success.  The band had been in existence since 1975, initially going by the name of Tiger Lily, changing it to Ultravox! in 1976, with the exclamation mark being dropped in 1978.

They were initially signed to Island Records, for whom they recorded three albums and released six singles without getting close to the charts.  They were originally seen as part of the dying punk/emerging new wave movement in the UK, as can be seen from their place in the line-up of the opening day of the Reading Festival in 1978 alongside the likes of The Jam, Penetration and Sham 69.

There was a change in sound with the third album, Systems of Romance, which was released in September 1978, thanks to a greater use of synths.   It’s an album that wasn’t well received at the time, but has since been re-assessed by many critics as one of the records which helped define the electro sounds that began to take root at the end of the decade and into the 80s.

Island Records dropped the group on 31 December 1978 (I’m assuming this was something to do with dates of contracts).  Ultravox managed to self-fund a short tour of America in the early months of 1979, during which more tensions surfaced.  Lead singer John Foxx took his leave of the band in March 1979, as too did guitarist Robin Simon.  To all intent and purposes, it looked to be all over.

Chris Cross, Warren Cann and Billy Currie still had belief that success could be achieved, buoyed partly by the fact that Gary Numan, the newly emerged superstar of synth-pop, was a fan of the band and had recruited Currie to play on his records and as part of the touring band.

Currie was also involved with Visage, through which he met and worked alongside Midge Ure. One thing led to another, and Ure accepted the offer to become lead vocalist and guitarist with a slimmed-down Ultravox.

Record companies were desperate to sign any group that had potential to ride the wave of the new electro sounds, and Ultravox were soon attracting all sorts of A&R reps to their live shows in London.  Chrysalis Records put forward an attractive offer, but it was dependent on the label bosses being convinced there were hit singles in the offing.  The group decided to take a demo of a new song that had been recorded in London across to the Cologne studio of producer Conny Plank.  Some magic was worked and the ‘finished’ version of Sleepwalk was presented to Chrysalis, after which the contract was signed.

Sleepwalk was issued as the band’s debut single for the new label in June 1980.  It proved to be something of a slow burner, taking four weeks to crack the Top 40 where it kicked around for almost two months, defying the normal gravity of chart singles with its weekly positions being 39, 34, 33, 29, 31, 29, 30, indicating a consistent level of sales on a weekly basis without ever really taking off.

The follow-up single, Passing Strangers, turned out to be a disappointing flop, and it took until January 1981, and the release of the title track from the album Vienna, before Ultravox became everything that its members had always believed they could be.

Here’s the b-side to the first hit single.

mp3: Ultravox – Waiting

It’s quite different in tone and style. It’s certainly not easy to dance to.

JC